Molecular Cell, volume 77, issue 5, pages 951-969.e9
AMPK, a Regulator of Metabolism and Autophagy, Is Activated by Lysosomal Damage via a Novel Galectin-Directed Ubiquitin Signal Transduction System
Jingyue Jia
1
,
Bhawana Bissa
1
,
Lukas Brecht
2
,
Lee Allers
1
,
Seong Hee Choi
1
,
Yuexi Gu
1
,
Mark Zbinden
3
,
MARK BURGE
4
,
Graham Timmins
5
,
Kenneth R. Hallows
6
,
C Münz
2
,
Sudha Singh
1
2
Munich Cluster of Systems Neurology, Munich, Germany
|
3
Human Metabolome Technologies America, Boston, MA, USA
|
4
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2020-03-01
Journal:
Molecular Cell
scimago Q1
SJR: 9.332
CiteScore: 26.0
Impact factor: 14.5
ISSN: 10972765, 10974164
Molecular Biology
Cell Biology
Abstract
AMPK is a central regulator of metabolism and autophagy. Here we show how lysosomal damage activates AMPK. This occurs via a hitherto unrecognized signal transduction system whereby cytoplasmic sentinel lectins detect membrane damage leading to ubiquitination responses. Absence of Galectin 9 (Gal9) or loss of its capacity to recognize lumenal glycans exposed during lysosomal membrane damage abrogate such ubiquitination responses. Proteomic analyses with APEX2-Gal9 have revealed global changes within the Gal9 interactome during lysosomal damage. Gal9 association with lysosomal glycoproteins increases whereas interactions with a newly identified Gal9 partner, deubiquitinase USP9X, diminishes upon lysosomal injury. In response to damage, Gal9 displaces USP9X from complexes with TAK1 and promotes K63 ubiquitination of TAK1 thus activating AMPK on damaged lysosomes. This triggers autophagy and contributes to autophagic control of membrane-damaging microbe Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Thus, galectin and ubiquitin systems converge to activate AMPK and autophagy during endomembrane homeostasis.
Found
Are you a researcher?
Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.